Me at 2am on Coogee Beach, after a mega Christmas Party Rave left over 30,000 bottles on the beach (my estimate).

Everyone on ROAM is the same- I reckon water pollution makes all our blood boil.

Recently, I came face-to-face with this marine debris problem in Tahiti. ROAM is anchored just south of Papeete, near a channel not too far from the shore.

A Day We Saw The Wave of Crap

I love a good snorkel so I spent an afternoon alone checking out the nearby coral bombies. The underwater life here is EPIC. Tropical fish of every kind, mingling around corals of every colour. The scenery constantly changing and revealing more magic. I’m my happiest when swimming and diving through these delicate areas.

As I was snorkelling, a rainstorm passed over the island. As I finished my snorkel sesh and started swimming back to ROAM, I swam right into a HUGE current of plastic trash. Bottles were everywhere, in orders of magnitude than the schools of fish I just saw 10 minutes earlier.

I was swimming in the tonnes of rubbish that had been tossed from cars along the main road just a few hundred metres away.

Bottles, styrofoam, food packaging - all of it had been transported by a flash flood, down the gutters and into the water world. Out of sight, out of mind.

Part time Sailor, part time Ocean Garbage Collector

I still had my fins and mask on, so I got to work collecting the rubbish. Liss, Baz and Marie were also out for a surf and returning on the dinghy, collecting what they could on the way back.

After swimming for a good hour, collecting and collecting putrid, manky bottles, styrofoam and packaging, I scrubbed my skin and my hair and sat.

Sat thinking about what that experience meant.

Will any of that natural underwater magic of the coral bombies be there in the future, if we keep dousing the place with oil, plastic, and other toxic crap?

I came to the conclusion that it’s likely not. The reefs will die. The colourful fish will choke. The ecosystem will crumble under the strain of LDPE, PP, HDPE, PVC, ABS and straight up petroleum.

Visualising the future

I look at Fishes Field Guides to help identify fish I see. This sparked an idea.

I photographed and photoshopped each piece I found. I imagined what a Fishes ID Guide would look like in a near future of no fish, just plastic.

Here is the result - the 2029 Tropical Fishes Guide to the Pacific Ocean.

I would love for this poster to go far and wide to spark change in our accelerating use of single-use plastic.